NCAA Basketball: Ranking Top 100 transfers entering 2025-26 season

An in-depth look, including scouting analysis, into the top transfers in college hoops
Arkansas vs St. John's
Arkansas vs St. John's | Mitchell Layton/GettyImages
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44. Dailyn Swaim, Texas

Dailyn Swain arrives in the Forty Acres after taking a significant sophomore year jump at Xavier last season, averaging 11.0 PPG, 5.5 RPG and 2.6 APG.

Following Sean Miller, the 6-foot-8 small forward made quite the impact defensively. According to Swish Theory, Xavier had the 28th-best defense with him on the floor. Without him? They were just the 157th-best defense in college basketball.

With such a long wingspan, Swain was one of the better multi-skilled off-ball defenders in the country last season. Offensively, he won’t be much of a shooting threat; however, he can accelerate in transition. Only a junior next season, the offensive upside is worth monitoring -- making Swain an easy pick inside the top 50 of transfers entering the 2025-26 season.

43. Zvonimir Ivisic, Illinois

Zvonimir Ivisic and his twin brother, Tomislav Ivisic, will join forces this season in Champaign. You've got to love it.

Zvonimir, who spent the past two seasons with John Calipari at Kentucky and Arkansas, averaged 8.3 PPG and 4.3 RPG last season. While the 7-foot-2 shot-blocking stretch saw inconsistent playing time, he showed flashes of potential as a post-up option and lethal three-point shooting weapon, shooting over 37% from three.

What makes this addition even more impressive? Illinois strength and conditioning coach Adam Fletcher recently tweeted that Ivisic put on 27 pounds this offseason. That’s mighty impressive.

42. Obi Agbim, Baylor

The Baylor Bears don't return a single minute from last year’s roster, meaning Scott Drew was left with no choice but to heavily attack the transfer portal.

He struck gold with Wyoming transfer Obi Agbim, a high-flying scorer who averaged 17.6 PPG, 3.2 RPG and 3.4 APG for the Cowboys last season. He shot nearly 47% from the field and almost 44% from three in a role where he was tasked to do the heavy lifting offensively.

In the FISU University Games Tournament, Agbim notched 30 points and 11 boards in Baylor’s Gold Medal loss. The Bears have found their lead guard. Expect Agbim to flourish in that role.

41. Morez Johnson Jr., Michigan

Only a freshman last season at Illinois, Morez Johnson Jr. -- a former four-star recruit -- put up some solid numbers with the Fighting Illini: 7.0 PPG, 6.7 RPG, shooting 64.2% from the field.

While numbers like that don’t necessarily pop out on the page, keep in mind Johnson led Illinois in both offensive and defensive rebounding percentages. And he did so in less than 20 minutes per game. 

It feels as if Johnson is just getting started. He’s a double-double threat anytime he touches the floor. He’s physical. He has the strength and motor to bully past defenders for second-chance points. The physicality alone is what separates Johnson, a traditional big, as a top 100 transfer entering the 2025-26 season.